Entrepreneurial Economics (731 Books)

Entrepreneurial Economics is the study of the entrepreneur and entrepreneurship within the economy. The accumulation of factors of production per se does not explain economic development. They are necessary inputs in production, but they are not sufficient for economic growth.

By: Karl Marx

By: Karl Marx

Introduction: The following work appeared as a series of leading articles in the Neue Rheinische Zeitung from April 4, 1849 onwards. It is based on the lectures delivered by Marx in 1847 at the German Workers? Society in Brussels.[3] The work as printed remained a fragment; the words at the end of No. 269: ?To be continued,? remained unfulfilled in consequence of the events which just then came crowding one after another: the invasion of Hungary by the Russians, the insu...

By: Karl Marx ; Friedrich Engels

Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels wrote their Manifesto in December 1847, as a guide to the fundamental principles and practices of Communists. The Manifesto also predicted the ultimate downfall of the capitalist system. (Summary written by Gesine)

By: Karl Marx

Excerpt: ?The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte? is one of Karl Marx? most profound and most brilliant monographs. It may be considered the best work extant on the philosophy of history, with an eye especially upon the history of the Movement of the Proletariat, together with the bourgeois and other manifestations that accompany the same, and the tactics that such conditions dictate. The recent populist uprising; the more recent ?Debs Movement; the thousand and one ...

By: Max Weber

Excerpt: Chapter 1. RELIGIOUS AFFILIATION AND SOCIAL STRATIFICATION. A glance at the occupational statistics of any country of mixed religious composition brings to light with remarkable frequency a situation which has several times provoked discussion in the Catholic press and literature, and in Catholic congresses in Germany, nam ely, the fact that business leaders and owners of capital, as well as the higher grades of skilled labor, and even more the higher technicall...

By: Karl Marx

The “Theses on Feuerbach” are eleven short philosophical notes written by Karl Marx in 1845. They outline a critique of the ideas of Marx’s fellow Young Hegelian philosopher Ludwig Feuerbach. The theses form a basis for the activism emphasised by Marx’s work, and this short text is perhaps best know for its ending - a Eureka for revolutionary socialism. The theses were written in 1845, but not published until 1888 (five years after Marx’s death), with slight modification...

By: Karl Marx

Capital, Volume I is the first of three volumes in Karl Marx’s monumental work, Das Kapital, and the only volume to be published during his lifetime, in 1867. Marx’s aim in Capital, Volume I is to uncover and explain the laws specific to the capitalist mode of production and of the class struggles rooted in these capitalist social relations of production. Marx said himself that his aim was “to bring a science [i.e. political economy] by criticism to the point where it ca...

By: Karl Marx ; Friedrich Engels

Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels wrote their Manifesto in December 1847, as a guide to the fundamental principles and practices of Communists. The Manifesto also predicted the ultimate downfall of the capitalist system. (Summary written by Gesine)